Thursday, May 04, 2017

The Quakerhouse
is a CAMRA award-winning pub, it features more or less perennially when the
gongs are handed out. Darlington Jazz Club meets regularly in the upstairs room
and top quality blues bands play the venue week in week out. The downstairs bar
in Mechanics’ Yard hosts the annual Saturday afternoon session of the
Darlington Jazz Festival and this year’s event featured three bands with local
connections.

The Dean Stockdale Trio (Stockdale, piano, Grant Russell, double bass and Adam Dawson, drums) opened
the show at one o’clock. This, a second lunchtime gig in two days (a monthly
gig has recently been established by Mick Shoulder at Bishop Auckland Town
Hall), heard Stockdale firing on all cylinders ahead of his soon-to-be-released
new CD. Working with him on this festival engagement were the Greater
Manchester bass and drums pairing of Grant Russell (the bearded bassist would
be staying over to play the Nick Ross Orchestra’s Glenn Miller show at the
Forum, Billingham on Sunday) and Adam Dawson, heard recently at the festival up
the road in Gateshead. Joyspring, Jobim’s Triste,
Mingus’ Nostalgia in Times Square –
exactly the sort of material to play on a Saturday afternoon to a crowd of jazz
fans and the unsuspecting casual
drinker. Stockdale’s fluent piano playing, observing the melody, met the
approval of the crowded room. Depping Grant Russell’s propulsive bass playing
worked a treat in the low-ceilinged ancient hostelry. Stockdale, Russell and
drummer Adam Dawson were literally in touching distance of one another such is
the cramped ‘performance’ space in the Quakerhouse.

Stockdale’s own
compositions sat well in the set list of standards; the pretty tune Another Time and Pike Place two of the pianist’s tunes, the latter an opportunity to
stretch out just as Oscar Peterson did on countless occasions. The room
thoroughly enjoyed listening to the Dean Stockdale Trio and having closed with Moonlight in Vermont (Dawson’s excellent brush work), and Out of Nowhere the audience insisted on
another one. As an encore Stockdale enquired: Have You Met Miss Jones?

Durham Music Service facilitates learning and performance opportunities for young musicians. One such beneficiary is Matt Roberts. The trumpeter has moved on working in London yet admirably he hasn’t forgotten his roots returning each year to, as they say, ‘put something back’. Another young musician following a similar path is the immensely talented drummer Abbie Finn. In her final year at Leeds College of Music, Finn returned home to play a festival gig. The Abbie Finn Quartet: Finn, drums, Harry Keeble, tenor saxophone, Geoffrey Hewer, guitar and Fraser Kerslake, bass, is an accomplished outfit. The four musicians vacated the woodshed, drove up the road to Darlington and played a cracking set to an appreciative audience. A quick turn around – one drum kit out, one drum kit in – and Finn and co were ready to go. Tenor man Harry Keeble cites Michael Brecker and Chris Potter as influences. Studious, slow-burn tenor playing, Potter’s The Source referencing late period Coltrane featured a fine guitar solo from Canadian born Masters student Geoffrey Hewer as Finn took a back seat – literally! – content to let the boys do their thing. Prompted by the audience, the self-effacing Finn stood up to introduce the numbers on the set list: Lady Bird (bassist Kerslake nonchalantly crafting a first rate solo), Freddie Hubbard’s Red Clay with its intense intro, the Speak No Evil Wayne Shorter Blue Note cut Witch Hunt (we knew where Keeble was coming from), nods and smiles between the four, the quartet delivered a winning performance, closing with Softly, as in a Morning Sunrise.The Quakerhouse
beers were going down well, punters were in it for the duration. Rick Laughlin has recently returned
home following a long spell living and working in London. Our pianist knew who to call upon when
offered a spot at the Darlington Jazz Festival. Who better than Bruce Rollo,
double bass, and drummer Ian Halford? Pianist Laughlin reckoned up…thirty, no, forty
years he’d known Halford! Laughlin invited the personable Alan Thompson(tenor saxophone) to temporarily abandon
festival duties to complete the line-up. Over the years they were just as
likely to go for a beer and a game of snooker, said Laughlin. Dozens of balls
were being potted at the Crucible, no chance of a game in the Quakerhouse as a
full size snooker table won’t fit into a telephone box.

The Rick Laughlin Trio with Alan Thompson: Laughlin, piano, Bruce Rollo, double bass, Ian Halford,
drums, and Alan Thompson, tenor
saxophone played for one hour, friends together in the confines of the
‘comfortable’ Quakerhouse. From time to time Halford craned his neck around the
frame of slap king bassist Rollo to make eye contact with Laughlin, checking on
a musical, as opposed to snooker, cue. Thompson’s relaxed, warm tenor style
drew listeners to the heart of the music – Beautiful
Love, Out of Nowhere, Stolen Moments (Rollo taking a solo), Sister Sadie, fine, indeed dazzlingly,
piano playing on Sugar, and Charlie
Parker’s rarely heard Barbados.
Laughlin, stylistically not unlike maestro Alan Glen, is a welcome addition to
the north east jazz scene. This festival date is likely to lead to bookings
elsewhere – perhaps Durham’s
Empty Shop for one. Rick Laughlin concluded the set with Skylark and, for an encore, What
is This Thing Called Love? Rick Laughlin is back, good news indeed.

Earlier at
Joseph Pease Place trumpeter Matt Roberts conducted a performance by a group of
emerging young musicians. Solid ensemble work, concise solos, Saturday shoppers
stopped by to listen – they couldn’t fail to be anything other than impressed.
As the festival programme proudly proclaimed…DARLINGTON JAZZ FESTIVAL BRINGING JAZZ TO THE TOWN CENTRE.

1 comment
:

Rick Loughlin and co played the Empty Shop a couple of years back, I think a Tony Eales intervention. They did some Grover Washington Jnr - the Jazz-funk before the smooth - which was a breath of fresh air for me.They seem to have come in around the same time as me but, while I bought lots of records and got drunk, they learnt how to play it. Respect.

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Bebop Spoken Here -- Here, being the north-east of England -- centred in the blues heartland of Newcastle and reaching down to the Tees Delta and looking upwards to the Land of the Kilt.Not a very original title, I know; not even an accurate one as my taste, whilst centred around the music of Bird and Diz, extends in many directions and I listen to everything from King Oliver to Chick Corea and beyond. Not forgetting the Great American Songbook the contents of which has provided the inspiration for much great jazz and quality popular singing for round about a century.The idea of this blog is for you to share your thoughts and pass on your comments on discs, gigs, jazz - music in general. If you've been to a gig/concert or heard a CD that knocked you sideways please share your views with us. Tell us about your favourites, your memories, your dislikes.Lance (Who wishes it to be known that he is not responsible for postings other than his own and that he's not always responsible for them.)